Wajda is a Polish surname that is also used in parts of Eastern Europe outside of Poland.
Notable persons with the name include:
Kowalczyk is the fifth most common surname in Poland. The name comes from the word "blacksmith".
Vajda is a Hungarian language surname. It is derived from Proto-Slavic *vojevoda. In medieval times, vajda was the equivalent of voivode, meaning a "war-leader" or "war-lord". Notable people with the surname include:
Wilko may refer to:
Kowalewski is a Polish surname. It may refer to:
Andrzej is the Polish form of the given name Andrew.
Czarnecki is a Polish surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Pawłowski is a Polish surname derived from the given name Paweł. In some cases, it is a noble surname derived from villages named Pawłowo. It is ranked about 20th in the list of the most common Polish surnames, with more than 50,000 carriers. It is popular especially in the mid-northern part of the country.
Pawlikowski is a Polish surname. Notable people with this surname include:
Kowal is a Polish surname meaning "smith". It may refer to:
Pawlik is a surname. It is a diminutive of the Polish given name Paweł ("Paul"). Pawlik is related to the Czech surname Pavlík.
Bielecki is a Polish-language surname. It is related to a number of surnames in other languages.
Kovalevich is a Slavic surname used in Russian and Ukrainian, Belarusian, and Polish cultures.
Szulc is a Polish surname, a version of the German surname Schulz. Notable people with the surname include:
Kowalik is a Polish surname. The word has two literal meanings: a bird of nuthatch genus or a diminutive of Kowal, meaning "smith". Notable people with the surname include:
Białkowski is a Polish surname. Its Russified form is Belkovsky/Belkovski.
Vaida may refer to:
Szmidt and Szmit are Polish-language transliterations of the German surname Schmidt. They may refer to:
Kuźniar is a Polish-language surname. It is an occupational surname literally meaning "blacksmith" (archaic), from "kuźnia", "smithy".
Białecki, feminine: Białecka; plural: Białeccy) is a Polish-language surname. It is a toponymic surname literally meaning "from Białcz".
Petrusewicz is a Polish gender-neutral surname of Eash-Slavic origin. Archaic feminine forms: Petrusewiczowna, Petrusewiczowa. It should be distinguished from the spelling Pietrusiewicz which conforms to the Polish phonology, which is usually a by-name in the noble Polish clan Wysoczański. It is a patronymic surname derived from the East Slavic given name Petrus', a diminutive of Piotr/Petro/Piatro (Peter).